“Youclidean” is an art exhibition by the young artist Elena Geleva that will open tomorrow, (Monday, November 18) at 8 pm in the Gallery of the Youth Cultural Center.
Elena Geleva for her initiation around the Youclidean exhibition says: “I come from the English language; The pronunciation of the two letters ‘E’ and ‘U’ written one after another and the pronunciation of ‘You’, are almost indistinguishable.”
“I remove the first two letters ‘Eu’ from the word Euclidean (Euclidean) and replace them with the pronoun ‘You’ (You). Ideally, I’m borrowing the first postulate of the Euclidean ‘Elements’. ‘1. A straight section can connect any two dots. ‘for the joke of suggesting Youclidean’s only postulate; ‘Consensus (right section) can merge any two observers (dots)’, says Geleva.
The essence of Geleva’s works that correspond to Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai’s ‘Big Wave’ is the repetition of the cosmos with sequences of apparent originality, the announcement said.
The exhibition will feature twenty works in different formats, from grandiose large canvases to medium-sized, no less grandiose in quality.
“It is those glimpses of temporal individual experience that we can perceive mathematically precisely (figuratively) from Elena’s canvas.” Deeds are a type of tantra that is a holistic approach to life, which invites willing individuals to explore and integrate their spiritual and physical dimensions for a deeper and connected being. There is no need for any further analysis and “shivering” for the works of Elena Geleva who is an earthly young artist but on the other or the same hand, a mature and adult author who with her works has won a peak, or a single point from the ‘big wave'”, says Gorjan Gjorgjiev about the exhibition.
“Every writing has a beginning and an end, every work has a beginning and a end, but looking at Elena Geleva’s works I am enveloped in a timeless and infinite space in which you just have to BE and breathe it in.” Into her inner world breathing in I fell and stayed in a world of shapes and symbols, colors and nuances trying to decipher what the author wanted to say, writes Vesna Nicevska on the occasion of the exhibition.
The exhibition will be open until November 30